8 508 résultats
Sequel to "My Family and Other Animals" recounting more hilarious adventures of the Durrell family (with assorted wildlife) on Corfu. Book
Sequel to "My Family and Other Animals" recounting more hilarious adventures of the Durrell family (with assorted wildlife) on Corfu. Book
pp. 276, in 8°, rileg. edit. con sopracoperta.
8vo, br. ed. br., pp. 182, cm 15x20. (Piccoli Saggi. 65). L'undici maggio del 330 Costantino fondò la sua Nuova Roma, meglio nota come Costantinopoli. Il sito della nuova capitale, tuttavia, aveva già una storia lunghissima, che iniziava dalla preistoria e proseguiva con la colonia megarese di Bisanzio, cruciale emporio sul Bosforo e inespugnabile avamposto contro i barbari. Il corpus arcaico di miti e leggende che circondava quest'antico insediamento, di cui i testi antichi ci hanno conservato tracce preziose, si trovò all'improvviso proiettato su un palcoscenico mondiale: retori, poeti, storici fecero a gara nel nobilitare queste tradizioni e nel costruire, nel passato di Bisanzio, una serie impressionante di presagi della futura grandezza. La propaganda imperiale trasformò così l'eroe fondatore Bisante, nipote di Zeus, in un nuovo Romolo, e la dea Ecate, protettrice della città negli assedi, sembrò anticipare il ruolo che sarebbe stato attribuito alla Vergine. E allo stesso tempo, gli antichi monumenti che rimanevano di questo passato remoto furono avvolti da leggende che li dipingevano come talismani incantati dalla magia degli antichi sapienti. Quando i Turchi infine conquistarono Costantinopoli, nel 1453, ereditarono e rielaborarono ulteriormente questo patrimonio di miti, ipotizzando una serie vertiginosa di fondazioni e rifondazioni che iniziava con Salomone per culminare nella nascita di Istanbul. In queste pagine viene rievocata questa "storia leggendaria" di Bisanzio, una costruzione culturale che è in corso ancora oggi.
Imaginative thesis that "challenges the whole basis of the question of what is classical about Classical civilization, arguing that it has deep roots in Afroasiatic cultures with these influences being systematically ignored, denied or suppressed since the eighteenth century - chiefly for racist reasons." 575p.bibliography. index. Book
Murder,mystery and mayhem in Athens and New York resulting from the discovery of a MSS of Homer made for Alexander the Great. 339p.Crisp copy, looks unread Book
In this study of the fateful encounters between Europe and Asia on the shores of a legendary sea, Neal Ascherson explores the disputed meaning of community, nationhood, history, and culture in a region famous for its dramatic conflicts. What makes the Back Sea cultures distinctive...is the way their component parts came together over the millennia to shape unique communities, languages, religions, and trade. 306. map. bibliography, index. Book
Shelfwear to book. Faint creasing to wraps. Spine sunned. Scholar's name to ffep (Jenifer Neils). Light pencilling to a few pages. ; Xxii, 364pp, illustrated. The Africans who came to ancient Greece and Italy participated in an important chapter of classical history. Although evidence indicated that the alien dark- and black-skinned people were of varied tribal and geographic origins, the Greeks and Romans classified many of them as Ethiopians. In an effort to determine the role of black people in ancient civilization, Mr. Snowden examines a broad span of Greco-Roman experience--from the Homeric era to the age of Justinian--focusing his attention on the Ethiopians as they were known to the Greeks and Romans. The author dispels unwarranted generalizations about the Ethiopians, contending that classical references to them were neither glorifications of a mysterious people nor caricatures of rare creatures. Mr. Snowden has probed literary, epigraphical, papyrological, numismatic, and archaeological sources and has considered modern anthropological and sociological findings on pertinent racial and intercultural problems. He has drawn directly upon the widely scattered literary evidence of classical and early Christian writers and has synthesized extensive and diverse material. Along with invaluable reference notes, Mr. Snowden has included over 140 illustrations which depict the Negro as the Greeks and Romans conceived of him in mythology and religion and observed him in a number of occupations--as servant, diplomat, warrior, athlete, and performer, among others. Presenting an exceptionally comprehensive historical description of the first major encounter of Europeans with dark and black Africans, Mr. Snowden found that the black man in a predominantly white society was neither romanticized nor scorned--that the Ethiopian in classical antiquity was considered by pagan and Christian without prejudice. ; 364 pages
THIS VOLUME ONLY. 19X13.5 cm. VII+177 pages. Hardcover. Spine slightly faded. Several pages slightly stained. Else in good condition.
A powerful autobiography set in the turbulent decade of 1940s Greece. Through the eyes of an impressionable and intelligent young man who came of age in a time of world war, foreign occupation, resistance, and civil war, we witness the tragedy and trauma suffered by Greece. While uniquely personal, this is also the story of young Greeks cast unwillingly into the ambivalences and horrors of WWII.The authors descriptions are vivid and convincing. Against a rigorously researched backdrop of the key historical events, we see youthful idealism being forcibly reconciled to the realities of hunger, brutality, dissension, and death. With a keen eye for detail, and reflecting on the mundane as well as the profound, we watch as Greece patriotically fends off foreign invasion and survives years of harsh occupation, but gullibly and disastrously succumbs to the blandishments of utopians. Book
8vo, br. ed. pp.xviii-430. the first fully comprehensive study of the largest part of the Roman army, the auxilia. This non-citizen force constituted more than half of Rome s celebrated armies and was often the military presence in some of its territories. Diverse in origins, character, and culture, they played an essential role in building the empire, sustaining the unequal peace celebrated as the pax Romana, and enacting the emperor s writ. Drawing upon the latest historical and archaeological research to examine recruitment, belief, daily routine, language, tactics, and dress, this volume offers an examination of the Empire and its soldiers in a radical new way. Blood of the Provinces demonstrates how the Roman state addressed a crucial and enduring challenge both on and off the battlefield - retaining control of the miscellaneous auxiliaries upon whom its very existence depended. Crucially, this was not simply achieved by pay and punishment, but also by a very particular set of cultural attributes that characterized provincial society under the Roman Empire. Focusing on the soldiers themselves, and encompassing the disparate military communities of which they were a part, it offers a vital source of information on how individuals and communities were incorporated into provincial society under the Empire, and how the character of that society evolved as a result.
Vintage copy of a finely detailed guide to archaeological and other interesting sites in Athens & Attica. 158p.fold-out maps. plans. index. Crisp and tight but usual library marks Ex-Library
Complete guide to archaeological and other interesting sites in Athens & Attica. Street atlas of Athens and 14 maps and plans by John Fowler 189p +14 pages of maps. index. Book
Joice Nankivell was born in Australia and during her long and eventful life was in Ireland during the troubles, joined with her husband Stanley Loch in the Quaker missions that were sent to help the Polish devastated by World War I, and then to Greece to assist with the population displaced from Asia Minor. After which she and her husband settled into an old Byzantine tower at Prosforion, on the border with Mt.Athos where she established a rug weaving workshop for the refugee women. During World War II she helped Jewish refugees get to Israel.. Well deserving her status as "the most decorated Australian woman." 360p.plates[some color] maps Book
In 4o, pp. da 537 a 576, br., varie tavv. n.t. Articoli: Nuove attribuzioni per alcuni disegni degli Uffizi (O.H. Giglioli); Lavori a Gortina (A.M. Colini); Una veduta del Carlevarjis alla R.Galleria Estense (R. Pallucchini); Wicar disegnatore (G.R. Ansaldi); Un ritratto di Cesare Tallone alla R. Pinacoteca di Brera ( A. Morassi); Un raro esempio di porcellana medicea (A. Del Vita). Ottimo (4940/ ARTE - CRETA - GRECIA - ARCHEOLOGIA - PERIODICI)
XXXIII, 246, [8] p., ill. in nero n.t.; 28,5 x 22,5 cm. Cart. edit. Etichetta di biblioteca (dismesso) in copertina e timbro al risguardo e su 2-3 pagine, per il resto buono
The author and family went to live on a small Greek island - Kea - and this book lovingly describes their experiences .156p. illus. photos.0918266334 Book
22x28.5 cm. 40+37 pages. Hardcover. Spine taped together. Top and bottom of spine slightly chafed. Binding slightly visible between several pages. Pages slightly yellowing. Else in good condition.
Former owner's bookplate to front inner cover. Else Minor shelfwear. DJ is tattered and price-clipped with tears and chipping. DJ crudely repaired at spine with cellotape. ; Although the subject of the book is primarily bibliographical, namely, the methods of book making from the date of Homer until the supersession of papyrus by vellum in the fourth century CE, one of its main objects has been to show the bearings of the material and form of books on literary history and criticism, and to consider what new light has been thrown by recent research on the origin and growth of the habit of reading in ancient Greece and Rome. Contents: 1. The use of books in ancient Greece. 2. The papyrus roll. 3. Books and reading at home. 4. Vellum and the codex. ; 8.5 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 136 pages
Light soiling. ; Unchanged Reprint of 1932. Although the subject of the book is primarily bibliographical, namely, the methods of book making from the date of Homer until the supersession of papyrus by vellum in the fourth century CE, one of its main objects has been to show the bearings of the material and form of books on literary history and criticism, and to consider what new light has been thrown by recent research on the origin and growth of the habit of reading in ancient Greece and Rome. Contents: 1. The use of books in ancient Greece. 2.The papyrus roll. 3. Books and reading at home. 4. Vellum and the codex. ; 8.5 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 136 pages
Slight fraying to spine ends. Minor shelfwear. ; Although the subject of the book is primarily bibliographical, namely, the methods of book making from the date of Homer until the supersession of papyrus by vellum in the fourth century CE, one of its main objects has been to show the bearings of the material and form of books on literary history and criticism, and to consider what new light has been thrown by recent research on the origin and growth of the habit of reading in ancient Greece and Rome. Contents: 1. The use of books in ancient Greece. 2. The papyrus roll. 3. Books and reading at home. 4. Vellum and the codex. ; 8.5 x 0.75 x 5.75 Inches; 136 pages
<p>21 cm, brossura editoriale illustrata in nero, p. 278.</p>
Roma, 1910, 12 giugno, copertina illustrata a colori in fascicolo completo di 16 pp. de 'La Tribuna Illustrata'.
Madrid, Comunidad Madrid, 2004. Numerosas ilustraciones en color y negro. 255p. 4ºmayor. Rústica editorial ilustrada. Libro en castellano, inglés y griego. Muy buen ejemplar.
Mm 180x255 Due volumi in copertina rigida, sovraccoperta editoriale con piccoli strappi e segni d'uso, 824 pagine complessive, alcuni segni di pennarello rosso alle pagine 485, 507 e 508. Interno in ottimo stato. SPEDIZIONE IN 24 ORE DALLA CONFERMA DELL'ORDINE.